‘There needs to be a moral investigation of this. It’s not gonna come out of the Attorney General’s office in Harrisburg’ It’s 1996. The Pennsylvania attorney general is an obscure but ambitious political appointee from Pittsburgh named Tom Corbett. A prominent public figure is caught having sex with an under-aged minor. Investigators would come to believe VIPs are engaging in pedophilia and prostitution, and that the sex ring is well entrenched and politically protected by a corrupt state attorney general’s office. And no one is protecting the young sex victims. Protecting whom, and why? Gov. Tom Corbett (top) and accused serial pedophile Jerry Sandusky. Tom Corbett’s political agenda and modus operandi began to emerge: A prominent figure would be sacrificed, but the VIP sex and prostitution ring would be concealed and protected for years. This was done not only to protect Corbett’s political allies, but also to protect Corbett’s own political fortunes and ambitions. On Labor Day weekend, 1996 — about the same time a state grand jury says Penn State defensive coach Jerry Sandusky began using the Penn State athletic shower room and the Second Mile charity to seduce young boys — a state senator from York, Pennsylvania, Dan Delp, enjoys a weekend of drinking and sex with a 19-year-old girl supplied through contacts with the York County district attorney’s office. When the pedophile sex scandal becomes public, the case is quickly referred to Pennsylvania Attorney General Tom Corbett. Corbett and his close allies would time and again obstruct and cover up the sex ring — for more than fifteen years. Tom Corbett’s political agenda and modus operandi began to emerge: A prominent figure would be sacrificed, but the VIP sex and prostitution ring would be concealed and protected for years. This was done not only to protect Corbett’s political allies, but also to protect Corbett’s own political interests and ambitions. Sound familiar? In this video excerpt, former Pennsylvania Police Chief Herbert Grofcsik discusses how he was forced to ask federal agents to investigate the sex abuse of young people at the hands of prominent and protected Pennsylvanians. As Pennsylvania newspaper editor and publisher Jim Sneddon and others explain it, the overtly political Pennsylvania attorney general’s office was the obstacle protecting the sex ring. Soon complaints would emerge that Corbett obstructed any number of high profile investigations to ease and help his path to the Pennsylvania governor’s office. “I said there needs to be a moral investigation of this. It’s not gonna come out of the Attorney General’s office in Harrisburg,” Sneddon says he knew. But there was a problem: the FBI office in Harrisburg had close working contacts with politicians and law enforcement officials close to the perpetrators and Attorney General Corbett.